• Keine Ergebnisse gefunden

V ATICAN SECRET ARCHIVES

Im Dokument Kirsi Salonen (Seite 25-28)

ASV = Archivio Segreto Vaticano

Arm.

= Armadio

Congr. Vescovi e Regolari, Visita Ap.

= Congrega zione dei Vescovi e Regolari, Visita Apostolica

Instr. Mise.

= Instrumenta Miscellanea

Penitenzieria Ap., Reg. Matrim. et

Div. = Penitenzieria Apostolica, Registra Matrimonialium et Diversorum

Reg. Vat.

= Registra Vaticana

Reg. Lat.

= Registra Lateranensia

Reg. Suppl.

= Registra Supplicationum

Reg. Aven.

= Registra Avenionensia

RPG = Repertorium Poenitentiariae Germanicum

7

PREFACE

The present publication contains selected papers from two international conferences: the first was held at the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bergen (Norway), in October, 20031 and the second at the Department of Me­

dieval Studies, Centrat European University, Budapest (Hungary), in January, 2004.2 The purpose of these meetings was to gather researchers interested in the history and significance of the papal curia and, in particular, the Apostolic Peni­

tentiary, in the later Middle Ages. The main emphasis was placed on a compara­

tive approach and on the role of peripheral areas of Western Christendom in their communication with the Holy See.

There are various kinds of centre-and-periphery hierarchies.3 There are geographic, social, economic, and cultural peripheries and centres. "The generat textbooks ... address materials from the geographical and social peripheries of privileged cultures only as adjuncts to their central narrative .... The history of Scandinavia and Eastern Europe become excursus to a central narrative.'"'

However, conceming the communication of the Holy See with various ar­

eas of Christendom in the Middle Ag es, the irnpact of 'peripheries' has attracted a new interest in recent years. Since the opening of the archives of the Apostolic Penitentiary to researchers in 1983 relatively few scholars have exploited the sources, but recently their number has increased. Most of them have studied the supplications to the Penitentiary of petitioners from their own home countries and edited material on a national basis. The German Historical Institute, under the leadership of Ludwig Schmugge, has already published several volumes of entries concerning German-speaking territories. Also, the Norwegian and Ice­

landic material has recently been released by Torstein Jßi'gensen and Gastone Saletnich. Sirnilar enterprises are in process in several other countries: Poland, Denmark, Sweden and Finland, England and Wales. The examination of

territo-1 "The Lote Middle Ages and the Penitentiary Texts: Centre and Periphery in Europe in the Pre-Refonnation Era."

2 "Ad Confines. The Papal Curia and the Eastern and Northern Peripheries of Christendom in the Later Middle Ages(l41h -151h c.)."

3 For this and the following, see Teofilo F. Ruiz, "Center and Periphery in the Teaching of Medieval History," in Medieval Cultures in Contact, ed. Richard F. Gyug (New York:

Fordham University Press, 2003), 252.

4 Ibidem, 248.

ries on the geographic peripheries in their relation to Rome has been a main fo­

cus in these studies.

The archival material of the Penitentiary and the communication of the papal curia with the various regions of late medieval Europe should, however, not be studied only on national Ievels. There is an increasing need for such studies to be supplemented by comparative searcbes for differences and analo­

gies in how Christians from different corners of Europc used the papal offices and were treated by them. It is well known that even though the regulations of canon law were in theory the same for everyone, regional differences in inter­

preting and applying them emerged in the Late Middle Ages. The need to turn to the papal authority in matters of canon law varied depending on the role of local bishops and the presence or absence of papal Iegates or collectors, who often bad the power to deal with similar matters in

partibus.

Also, people in the centml territories of Christendom bad different opportunities for turning to the papal curia with their requests than those living on the peripheries of the publication: Northem Europe and East Central Europe. Comparative analyses of Scandinavian and Scottish source material from the Penitentiary Registers are made by Torstein Jsrgensen, Kirsi Salonen, and lrene Fumeaux. The studies on East Central Europe are introduced by an inquiry concerning the general impor­

tance of the area for the papal curia (Jadranka Neralic), and an overview of the communication of the Holy See with Albania (Etleva Lala). Piroska Nagy and Kirsi Salonen offer a quantitative analysis of East Central Europe and the Peni­

tentiary (1458-1484), followed by contributions on individual territories, such as the Czech Iands (Lucie Dolezalova) and Dalmatia

(Ana

Marinkovic). The contribution by Gastone Saletnich and Wolfgang Müller indicates that in any studies of the roJe of peripheries one must not neglect the more central areas.

Blanca Szeghyova and Ludwig Schrnugge show that local archives and their contents are an indispensable additional source for comparative analyses.

Many friends and colleagues have helped in preparing this book for print.

We are pleased to thank the personnet of the Penitenzieria Apostolica, especially Padre Ubaldo Todeschini, for reading the manuscript and suggesting useful cor­

rections. We are also much obliged to the skilled staff of the

Sala

di

Studio

in the Vatican Archives, who patiently brought us volume after volume of the

reg-9

isters and helped with other problems. Judith Rasson from Central European University deserves our gratitude for copyediting our text.

Finally, we wish to thank the academic institutions which in a more direct way have promoted this project: the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Bergen, the Department of Medieval Studies at the Central European University in Budapest, the Institut filr Realienkunde of the Austrian Academy of Seiences and the Academy of Finland, and the Department of His­

tory at the University ofTampere.

Bergen, Budapest, and Tampere, November 2004

Gerhard Jaritz, Torstein Jergensen, Kirsi Salonen

Im Dokument Kirsi Salonen (Seite 25-28)

ÄHNLICHE DOKUMENTE